THE MWIC GA N Ti A . Y Ruthvens Give Fifth In Series Of School Teas Special Guests Are To Mosher Hall, Zone And Chapter Houses Be III The fifth in the series of Ruthven undergraduate teas will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., today, at which President and Mrs. Ruthven will re- ceive Michigan students. So far this1 year, the teas have been well attend- ed with an average of 200 guests. As todays tea is the first to be held' since examinations, an extra large number of students are expected by Betty Gatward, '38 who is a member of the League social committee and is in charge of the Ruthven teas. Mrs. Martha L. Ray, social director of Mosher Hall, Mrs. L. C. Doggett, house. chaperon at Kappa Kappa Gamma, Mrs. George H. Wilson, house chaperon at Kappa Delta and Miss Ruth Sandusky, president of Mosher Hall have been invited to pour. Mosher Hall, Kappa Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Zone III will be honored as the special guests invited. The fraternities which are specially invited to attend are Kappa Delta Rho, Kappa Nu, Sigma Chi, Theta Chi and Zeta Psi. All students of the University are both urged and invited to attend. Various members of the League so- cial. committee will officiate as host- esses and will show the students at- tending the collections of Egyptian and Oriental art treasures and pot- tery belonging to President and Mrs. Ruthven. Bowling Subscriptions Will Be Closed Today Today is the last day for women to sign up for the round robin tour- nament in bowling, according to Lois MacLean, '39SM, manager. Sign-up sheets are posted in Barbour Gymna- sium and the W.A.B. Each team will be composed of three women, and will bowl once a week. The team having the highest total score for two games will be the winner of each match. Woman Journalist To Lecture Today Miss Helen Bower, a member of the editorial staff of the Detroit Free Press, will speak on "Adventures in Interviewing" at a meeting of the women's branch of the Michigan Club to be :held at 8 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. All women students interested in journalism are invited to .hear Miss Bower and to attend the subscrip- tion dinner, to precede the meeting. Tickets-for the dinner are priced at 75 cents. : Miss Bower, a member of the board of the Alumnae Council, was for- merly a student at the University. She is affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gmma. Miss Bower will be intro- duced by Mrs. Irene B. Johnson, club president. Board members who are to serve as hostesses are Mrs. Fred- erick Arnold, Mrs. Alfred O. Lee, Mrs. Evans Holbrook, Mrs. Harold Thosper, Mrs. Carl Dahlstrom, Mrs. James F. Breakey, Mrs. S. Beach Conger and Mrs. William C. Waltz. Chekhov Play Will Be.'Given By Dramatists "The Boor," a one-act comedy byl Chekhov, will be given at 8:30 p.m. Friday by members of the Ann Arbor Recreational Projects, under the di-7 rection of Carl Nelson, recreational leader, at the Unitarian Church. ' The cast will include Nelson, who, plays Smirnoff, the "boor"; Cathleen, Schurr, '37, who portrays the dis- illusioned Mrs. Popoy; and Prof. Norman Maier, who will be seen in the role of Luka, the bewildered ser- vant. Nelson formerly characterized, in] presentations of Play Production, the wild, Russian poet in "Sqularing thes Circle," the uncouth visitor in "Juno and the Paycock" and one of thef hapless youths in "Bury the Dead." Miss Schurr was connected with rep- ertory theatres in New York. The play will follow a supper given by the Women's Alliance of the church. The public is welcome. Assembly Ball' List Of Patrons Is Announced Parents Receive Invitation From Daance Committee; sell-Out Is Announced Patrons and patronesses for the third annual Assembly Ball to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the League Ballroom were announced yesterday by Virginia Krieghoff, '38, chairman of the patron committee for the dance. President and Mrs. Ruthven, Dean and Mrs. Joseph A. Bursley, Dean and Mrs. Edward Kraus, Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmonson, Dean and Mrs. Walter B. Rea, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, and Registrar and Mrs. Ira M. Smith have been named to act as patrons and patronesses for the ball. Others who will attend in that ca-' pacity are Prof. and Mrs. RobertC. Angell, Prof. and Mrs. Philip E. Bursley, Prof. and Mrs. Gali . Densmore and Prof. and Mrs. George McConkey. Dr. Margaret Bell, Mrs. Byrl Fox Bacher, Miss Jeanette Per- rG, Miss Ethel A. McCormick, Miss Mary E. Gleason, and Miss Ann Var- do have also been asked to act as patronesses. Miss Isabel Dudley. Miss Ruth Danielson, Mrs. Frederick Ray, Mrs. Joseph Parsons, Mrs. Ellery P. Pres- ton, Miss Kathleen Hamm, Miss Sara Rowe and Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Heitsch of Pontiac will attend the ball, Miss Krieghoff said, adding thatparents of the central committee memfbers were also asked to act as patrons and patronessesdfor the dance. Those who will attend the ball are Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Karlson of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Krieghoff of Grosse Pointe, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank W.1 Lambert of Detroit. A complete sell-out of tickets is- sued for the dance was announced yesterday by Janet Lambert, '37, tick- et chairman. In spite of the exist- ing demand for tickets, Miss Lambert stated no more will be issued. Phi Sig na Delta Elects Officers For New Year Phi Sigma Delta fraternity has an- ndunced the election of its officers for 1937-38. They are: Manuel Sla- vin, '39, master frater; Edward Gins- berg, '38, vice master frater; Richard Klein, '39, secretary; Herman Loh- man, '38, treasurer; Joseph Nellis, '38,. corresponding secretary and Kalman Small, '38, historian. The fraternity will have a com- bined initiation and installation ban- quet this Sunday, according to Morrie Herman, '38, social chairman. Invi- tations have been issued to the alum- ni of Phi Sigma Delta. 'CWomn'sClub Elects Officers For Next Year Mrs. Nate Spanger Chosen President; Name Heads Of Various Sections At the annual meeting of the Wom- en's Club of Ann Arbor, held at 2:30 p.m. yesterday in the League Ball- room, new offiders for the coming club year were elected. Mrs. William Hoad, retiring presi- dent of the club, presided at the meeting at which the following offi- cers were elected: Mrs. Nate Spanger, president, Mrs. Edward Blakeman, vice president, Mrs. Walter J. Breay, second vice president, Mrs. John J.. Raaf, recording secretary, Mrs. C. A. Reading, corresponding secretary and Mrs. Burton A. Hilbert, treasurer. New chairmen of the various sec- tions were also elected yesterday. Mrs. Dugald Duncanson will head the American home department, Mrs. W. A. MacLoud is to have charge of the applied education department, Mrs. Jack Sharman, Mrs. George Bleekman and Miss Ada Hill will be chairman of the Fine Arts, American citizenship and social welfare groups respectively. Mrs. J. C. Cleveland and Mrs. Ira Smith were chosen to be the deel- gates from the Ann Arbor club to the 1938 state convention, with Mrs. R. H. Davidson and Mrs. Charlotte Rueger as alternates. Shackleton Chosen To Head Pan Hell (Continued from Page 1) Phi sorority. She is a member of the Gargoyle editorial staff and was on a committee for the Sophomore Cabaret. Miss Loomis was also voted one of the 10 most beautiful women of the University. The meeting yesterday was con- ducted by Betty Anne Beebe, '37, president of Panhellenic for the past year. Mary MacIvor, '37, is the retiring secretary and Jean Hatfield, '37, is the retiring treasurer. Miss Loomis replaces Virginia Spray, '37. Jordan Hall Holds First I Tea Dance Of Semester Jordan Hall held its first tea dance this semester from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. yesterday, according to Madeline Krieghoff, '39, who was in charge of the affair. Mrs. William A. Bowen, Mrs. Her- bert A. Poppleton and Mrs. Florence Preston presided at the tea table in the radio room. Spring flowers decorated the rooms. Mexico And Orient Influence. Is Seen In Spring Hat Styles By HELEN CAYIA With spring on the wing, and the evidences, other than the mud on your shoe, already visible, you will find hats to be the most sensitive ar- ticle in your wardrobe. Hats reflect the season, the mood, or the occasion. The influence of the Tyrol fades this spring and we discover over-the border Mexico sweeping the country with her Spanish spirit. The som- bera-type hats are as wide and sweeping as the wide open spaces they are derived from. Some are fashioned in a sort of lattice design which casts intricate little patterns of shadow and light over the face. These hats with their long waving lines add a gay foreign note that will greatly heighten any spring costume. Turbans Prove Desirale A conquest of the Orient over the Occident is evidenced by the turban, destined to be out in front this year. Turbans may be worn back on the head as well as around it and are made in light materials designed to make the wearer almost unconscious that she has it on. You'll even be able to jam it into pockets. Andwhat makes them all the more desirable, they are most becoming to the new hair dresses. The popular rollnof curls turns up around the edges of the hat and add a pert, saucy touch. If you are smart you'll have a new Breton this year. If you were smart last year, last year's Breton will see a lot of this year's spring from the back of your head-from the back, it is Vogue decreed, to "look 1937" The fashion for campus spring wear Theatre: Michigan, "3 Smart Girls," with Deanna Durbin; Majes- tic, "Smartest Girl in Town," with Ann Sothern and Gene Raym6nd; Wuerth, "The Reunion," with the Dionne Quintuplets, and "Bengal Ti- ger," with Barton McLean; Orpheum, "Hollywood Boulevard," with John Halliday and "Absolute Quest," with Stuart Erwin. Exhibitions: From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Architectural building, an ex- hibition of Chinese art. Coffee Hour: From 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., in the Union, for all men stu- dents andhfaculty. Mrs. George M. McConkey will pour. Organ Recital: At 4:15 p.m.,in Hill Auditorium, E .-William Doty, As- sistant Professor of Organ, will pro- vide a program of organ composi- tions. Luncheon: In the Russian Tea Room of the League luncheon will be given for graduate students. Pro- fessor Ralph W. Aigler of the Law School, will speak informally on "The Supreme Court." Tea: From 4 to 6 p.m., President and Mrs. Ruthven will receive Mich- igan students. J.G.P. REHEARSALS The compulsory dance rhearsals for the coming week in J.G.P. have been announced by Marie Sawyer, dance chairman. The vil- lagers will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in W.A.B., and at 7 p.m. today the Waltz Step will meet in the League Ballroom. The Singing and Dancing Vil- lagers will meet at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in W.A.B. The Wooden Soldiers will meet at 4 p.m. Fri- day in the Sara Caswell Hall, Barbour Gymnasium. At 4:30 p.m. the French Dolls will meet in the same place. with your new tailored suit is a little felt beret. These hats are slightly rounder and larger this season and they require a little feather stuck up on one side in the Yankee Doodle style. All the colors of the rainbow are to be found made into this beret with the softest, smoothest felt ma- terial used. To Have Flowers Flowers are to be found sprinkled here and there all over the spring hats. Tiny pink rose buds nestled in a corner peeking out from one side of the brim, or a row of tulips stretched across the front make the hats echo the vernal sfirit. Violets and May flowers als ofind their places in the Easter bonnets. Rib- bons are popular too. . They tie in bows and stream down at one side to float in the spring breeze. Remember in selecting a hat to play up.your accessories and dress trinmmings. 1937 hats are going to be fun and you'll want to get in your spring exploring early. Frosit Frolic Ticket Sale Is Continued A small number of tickets are still available for Ftosh Frolic, it was an- nounced yesterday by Robert Mix, general chairman of the dance. Tickets may be obtained at the Union desk today after 3 p.m. The price per couple is $2.50 and only freshmen may purchase tickets. Iden- tification cards must be presented at the time of the sale. Freshmen women who desire tick- ets may obtain them today by calling Alberta Wood at Mosher Hall, it was announced by Mix. Zippers Are Featured Lightweight wool skirts that have a zipper all the way down the front and crepe blouses with zippers are now popular. * CANDIES * Try Some of.Julie's Truly HOME-MADE CHOCOLATES. Deliciously Different Made in Ann Arbor aside the # s nBell Tower at 222 So. Ingalls St. Ph. 8142 I d SENSATIONAL! NEW!' achineless Perwmaents ZOTOS - JAMAL VOGUE 307 South State BEtrUTY SPhLON Street Phone 8384 . ... ,: r l __MARILYN SHOPPET-: PPLRYIQ - n rk. BLOUSES $1.95 & $2.95 A good deal smarter your suit will be with lots of blopses for quick changes. Delightfully frilly and strictly tailored types. -~ -- ,'Ghe Elizabeth Pillon SHOP' 309 SOUTH STATE MMMMMM i I It's the First Of the Month! Don't delay. ,Buy your 1937 Michiganensi n today. Now only $4.50 t A,40S i f I